High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 29 text:
“
A V KINTZE L HE words, editorials, ureconstructionfl and travel mean a lot to Jeanne Shoemaker. They express what she hopes will be her future. A senior in the College, Jeanne is a journalism major, a fact which is ob- vious when you look at her record. Last year, she was editor-in-chief, news editor, and managing editor of the University Daily Kansan. The second ff semester she served as chairman of the Kansan Board. K X With an eye to the future, Jeanne keeps well informed on politics, par- . V ticularly international politics. The crystalization of her ambition to link the P 0167! post-War world with travel and journalism would be to write editorials on the rebuilding of Europe, she says. Besides being active in journalism, Jeanne is editor of the Y Calif publica- tion of the YWCA, president of Harmon Co-op, her home on the Hill, a member of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journalistic fraternity, and a member of Forums Board. Topping all other honors, she was elected to Mortar Board last year. NANCY GOERING.
”
Page 28 text:
“
24 FISHER This is Saturday afternoon so we know that Charlie Moffett not Jack Armstrong, has just broken away for a first and ten. The Jolliffe cheering section is in there pushing. p KINTZEL They satisfy -motto-of all Battenfeld formals. Patsy Creel and Bob Andrews don't seem hard to convince. ' KINTZEL Women of Harmon Co-op wouldn't be affected if all the cooks in Lawrence were made vice-presidents, of SOW. On K. P. by choice, they serve some of the best meals on the Hill. THE .IAYHAWKER six weeks session to join those who had been here all summer. A faculty operating committee helps outline our general policy, but we do our own work and are governed by our own officers. Individually we belong to the Independent Student Association and attend its dances en masse. We may not be social butterflies, but all work and no play has never been our rnottof' Il? :Ke ,lb 'QI-Iow do you get to Harmon? Down the steps past Battenfeld hall, along the path past the Kappa house, down the drive by Jolliffe hall then through the wilderness. Follow the path, take the turn to your right, and before you is the girl's cooperative at the University. How is it different from other houses? To begin with, the house is ours and we run it ourselves. The Student Housing board was founded by men who felt that the only way to learn was to learn by doing. The board buys the houses and rents them to us. Planning, cooking, cleaning, buying supplies and furniture, mowing the lawn, running the furnace, making decisions for 30, we have demonstrated that college students are adults and can meet and handle problems and situations which they will be required to meet after graduation. Harmon is not just a place to stay, a place where everything is done for you and all decisions made. It is a place to live. fl? 'llf Il' l'We from john Moore are keeping the co-op fire burning for the men during these lean. years. The John Moore co-op used to be where Harmon is now, but the girls have taken over because they needed a bigger place than we did. Even our unpracticed eyes must admit that feminine hands have done a lot for the place since we left. We manage to get along all right, though. Our services should be at a premium - not all fellows can turn out a neat cherry pie or drape windows. We have house shifts just as the girls at Harmon have and through concerted effort, present a presentable front. Fresh- men have as much voice in running the house as upperclassmen- that is one of the things we like about being Independent. Coopera- tion is no idle word the way we use itf' fl? :XC fl? 'I'm a hayseed, my hair is seaweed and my ears are made of leather and they Hap in windy weather. Gosh all hemlock, I'm tough as a pine knot for I'm a Corbin girl you seel' We always sing this song with pride in our hearts and tongues in our cheeks for we know that Corbin, women's residence hall, has all that other houses have and more of it. It is rather overwhelming, though, to come in as a freshman or new girl as 72 did this fall and find yourself one of 147. More than one girl has been embarrassed to meet another girl at an outside affair and find that she, too, was from Corbin. We feel lucky to be here, for the waiting list is long. The pink hall high on a hill is something more than a hall, it's a madhouse-until quiet hours. Like a separate society within herself, Corbin moves forward with the Independents. Many of its resi- dents work in offices on the Hill and 22 are waitresses in the Corbin dining room. We have a weekly newspaper, The Corbin Times, a budding swing band, and the beginning of a dance club. Our library Continued on Page 78
”
Page 30 text:
“
26 THE JAYHAWKEK Left to right Frrstrow Eloise West Kincaid Louise Stevenrn Wells ville Phyllis Cooper St Joseph Mo Wilma Pool St Joseph Mo Mary Jo Trompeter Horton Marllyn Whlteford Garnett Almeda Smlth Olathe Pat Finley Wellington Margaunte Hoover St Joseph Mo Audlne Dyer Wichita Betty Leighton Nortonvllle Second row. Vlr ginia Powell Olathe' Edna Wayne Lamb Olathe' Kathleen Fulk Troy' Katherine Wheelock Abilene' Coryln Holbrock Beloit' Margie Kelsey Topeka' Ray Ann Robinson Neosho Mo: Bonnie Jean Bidleman Kins- FH TEH HALL 915' ley, Joyce Merrick, Wellington, Lois Mann, Olathe. Not in picture: Pat Lattner, Olathe. LATHI HALL JHLLIFFH HALL Left to right, First row: Martha Joe Easter, Abilene, Emmalouise Britton, Columbus, Annette Stout, Rothville, Mo., Grace Piros, Scott City, Gwendolyn Kistler, Kansas City, Barbara Stanley, Coffeyville, Lula Hughes, Anthony, Ruth Dudley, lola, Jadene Stickler, Burlington. Sec- ond row: Marjorie Kaff, Overbrook, Mary Jane Vagt, Hillsboro, Patricia Dye, Independence, Billie Joan Kent, Humboldt, Mary Holbrook, Wash- ington, Helen Bozarth, Topeka, Phylis Oliver, Culver, Marylee Master- son, Columbus, Esther Colvin, Pittsburg. Left to right, First row: Jean Newcom, Oakley, Billie Stillman, Bush- ton, Rhoda Boman, Topeka, Helen Ramsey, Topeka, Rose Coughlin, Kansas City, Caroline Owsley, Kansas City, Jean Ball, Holyrood. Second row: Lula Hall, Powhattan, Kathleen Webster, Hanston, Helen Mather, Kansas City, Ardella Ringwalt, Oakley, Winifred Louis, Emporia, Phyllis Betts, Oberlin, Doris Faust, Kansas City.
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.